Need to keep your rental past your due date? At any time before your due date you can extend or purchase your rental through your account.

Rental Options

List Price $36.21Save

DUE 12/22/2017

SEMESTER

$32.26

DUE 12/08/2017

QUARTER

$30.47

DUE 11/21/2017

SHORT TERM

$28.68

Free Shipping On Every Order

Usually Ships in 3-5 Business Days

Author Biography

Read more

Terry Pinkard is Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University; author of German Philosophy 1760-1860: The Legacy of Idealism, Hegel: A Biography and Hegel's Phenomenology: The Sociality of Reason; and editor of Heinrich Heine on the History of Religion and Philosophy in Germany.

Table of Contents

Read more

Preface Introduction Part One Chapter 1: Disenchanted Aristotelian Naturalism A: Hegel's Aristotelian Turn 1: Animal Life 2: The Inwardness of Animal Life B: From Animal Subjectivity to Human Subjectivity C: Animal Life and the Will Chapter 2: Self-Consciousness in the Natural World A: Animal and Human Awareness B: Consciousness of the World C. Self-Consciousness 1: Being at Odds with Oneself in Desire 2: The Attempt at Being at One with Oneself as Mastery Over Others 3. Masters, Slaves and Freedom 4: The Truth of Mastery and Servitude 5: Objectivity, Intuition and Representation Part Two Chapter 3: The Self-Sufficient Good A: Actualized Agency: The Sublation of Happiness B: The Actually Free Will C: The Impossibility of Autonomy and the "Idea" of Freedom D. Being at One with Oneself as a Self-Sufficient Final End Chapter 4: Inner Lives and Public Orientation A. Failure in Forms of Life B. The Phenomenology of a Form of Life C. Greek Tensions, Greek Harmony D: Empire and the Inner Life Chapter Five: Public reasons, Private Reasons A. Enlightenment and Individualism B: Morality and Private Reasons C. Ethical Life and Public Reasons Chapter Six: The Inhabitable Alienation of Modern Life A: Alienation as Uninhabitability 1: Diderot's Dilemma 2: Civil Society and the Balance of Interests 3: Making the Sale and Getting at the Truth B: Power: the Limits of Morality in Politics 1. Bureaucratic Democracy? 2: The Nation State? Chapter Seven: Conclusion: Hegel as a Post-Hegelian A. Self-Comprehension 1: Hegelian Amphibians 2: Second Nature and Wholeness B: Final Ends?